 L.A. WOMAN - The Doors
Well, I just got into town about an hour ago
Took a look around, see which way the wind blow
Where the little girls in their Hollywood bungalows
Are you a lucky little lady in the City of Light
Or just another lost angel...City of Night
City of Night, City of Night, City of Night, woo, c'mon
L.A. Woman, L.A. Woman
L.A. Woman Sunday afternoon
L.A. Woman Sunday afternoon
L.A. Woman Sunday afternoon
Drive thru your suburbs
Into your blues, into your blues, yeah
Into your blue-blue Blues
Into your blues, ohh, yeah
I
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 Witness the lonely life of a dog toy as it waits for one of the nearly 75 million pet dogs in the United States to come along and tear the stuffing out of it, at which point its time within the $40.8 billion, U.S. pet industry will end in a trash can.
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 The osprey, one of the largest raptors in North America, loves to fish, lives for fish, eats almost nothing else but fish. As such, it has barbed pads on the bottom of its feet in addition to its talons for extra fish grip.
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 Interstate 94 is the United States northernmost, east-west interstate highway. This section lies on the western edge of Fargo, ND. Fargo, with an estimated population of around 93,000, is North Dakota's largest city. Originally named Centralia, it was renamed Fargo in honor of William Fargo, co-founder of the Wells Fargo Express Company, and is famous in pop culture as the setting for the 1996 Oscar-winning film, Fargo. Movie quote from character Officer Marge Gunderson: "So that was Mrs. Lundegaard on the floor in there. And I guess that was your accomplice in the wood chipper."
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 Have you heard the one about the legions of alligators living in the New York City sewer system? What about the baby alligators that are born in the sewers climbing the streetlamps to hunt birds? No? Me neither. The bird in this photo is real. The alligator is not, obviously.
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GUMBALLS FOR PEACE (5.1.07) |
 The gumball and gumball vending machines were introduced to the public in 1907. However, viable vending machines—there were previous failed attempts—first hit the United States in 1888, when machines installed on elevated subway platforms in New York City allowed you to buy a piece of Tutti-Frutti gum for a penny.
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